Smart Devices are Listening to (and Saving) Everything You Say, Here’s How to Stop It

The idea that the smart devices in your home and on your phone are listening to you—and recording what you are saying—is nothing new, and many Americans have become complacent with the breach of their privacy because of the convenience provided by the technology. However, it is still possible to maintain some crucial privacy with some of the most popular apps. Here are a few steps you can take:

Facebook

No matter what crazy updates or changes the app undergoes, the fact is that Facebook is a monster and whether they criticize it or not, more than 1 billion people have Facebook accounts.

One of the many problems with Facebook is that one of its updates has included giving the app access your microphone when you use Facebook Messenger. While the excuse Facebook gave was that it needed access to the microphone, in order to shoot live video within the app, the idea that Facebook has access to your smart phone’s microphone at all times is unsettling, to say the least.

iPhone Users: Go to Settings, click on Privacy, click on Microphone, and then slide the switch to the left on Messenger, turning it from green to white to turn it off.

Android Users: Go to Settings, click on Applications, then click on Application Manager, go to Facebook, click on Permissions, and then click on Turn off the mic.

Siri

iPhone users are all too familiar with the virtual friend living inside their smartphone, and while users often ask Siri a range of random questions, she is always listening—and even if the device is locked, saying “Hey Siri,” records your request and uploads the audio file to Apple’s servers for processing.

For iPhones using iOS 8 and later, Apple has made it so that even when the device is locked, the command of “Hey Siri” will activate the feature and give access to the phone. However, if you have experienced this new feature, you may have found that there are times when Siri is activated, even though you did not intentionally give the command.

How to turn it off: Click on Settings, go to Siri, and then toggle off Allow “Hey Siri.” For more security, also toggle off Access When Locked.

Google

While iPhone users have “Hey Siri,” Android users have “OK Google,” which also applies to Google Home speakers. With this feature, when a user says “OK Google” the device automatically begins recording and the audio it obtains is saved to your Google account.

How to turn it off on Android devices: Go to Settings, click on Google, then click on Voice and turn off “OK Google” detection.

Cortana

For Microsoft users, there is an equivalent to the voice-activated assistants “Hey Siri” and “OK Google,” called “Hey Cortana,” which has similar features.

The same privacy concerns have been raised by users who are worried about the amount of data Microsoft devices are storing as soon as the command “Hey Cortana” is allegedly heard.

How to turn it off: On your Windows computer, go to Cortana, select the Notebook icon in the right column, click on Settings and then toggle off “Hey Cortana.”

Amazon Echo

Amazon presents a new challenge, based on the fact that the assistant on its Echo device is not just activated by a phrase such as “Hey Alexa.” Instead, it is activated by a number of wake words, including, “Alexa,” “Amazon,” “Computer” and “Echo.”

While it is possible to turn off the microphone by clicking a button on top of the Echo device, that microphone is required to use the device in the first place. However, users do have the ability to track what Alex has recorded and to delete it.

To track and delete recordings: Open the Alex app, click on Settings, then click on History. You can then select and delete each entry.

“No system of mass surveillance has existed in any society, that we know of to this point, that has not been abused.” — Edward Snowden

About Rachel Blevins

Rachel Blevins is an independent journalist from Texas, who aspires to break the false left/right paradigm in media and politics by pursuing truth and questioning existing narratives. Follow Rachel on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Steemit and Patreon.

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